Abstract

The IgG and IgM type specific anticapsular pneumococcal antibody titres were studied with ELISA during one year following vaccination with a 14-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine in four different patient groups: 41 children splenectomized after a traumatic rupture, 16 splenectomized because of disease, 15 non-surgically managed after splenic rupture, and 19 healthy controls. Serum samples were obtained before vaccination and after 14, 60, 180, and 360 days. The IgG antibody responses were equally good in all of the patient groups, while the IgM antibody responses were less pronounced in the splenectomized. In the non-surgically managed patients, the IgM antibody titres after vaccination, as well as antibody responses per se, were significantly higher for all 12 pneumococcal types studied than in the patients who were splenectomized. Both the IgG and the IgM antibody titres were highest at 14 days after vaccination. However, while the IgG titres for most pneumococcal types remained elevated at 360 days, the IgM titres soon fell to prevaccination levels. The antibody response was less good for the types 3 and 6 A. The results indicate that the IgG antibody response to pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccination is unaffected in splenectomized individuals, but the IgM antibody response is decreased. In patients with a healed traumatically damaged spleen, both the IgG and IgM responses seem to be normal.

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